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The Beacon
B I S M A R C K - M A N D A N U N I T A R I A N U N I V E R S A L I S T F E L L O W S H I P & C H U R C H
818 E. Divide Ave.
Bismarck, ND 58501
701-223-6788
WEBSITE: bismanuu.org EMAIL: [email protected]
July 2015
Sunday Services & Children’s Programs: 9:00 AM
Fellowship & Refreshments: Following Service
Summer Services
Summer discussion services Sunday mornings
through August 30 at 9:00 am
Labor Day weekend Sunday, September 6, there
will be no official service but we will have coffee
hour and fellowship at 10:30 am.
Our regular Sunday morning services begin after
Labor Day on September 13 at 10:30 am.
On Sunday mornings in the summer, our format is re-
laxed and informal as we sit together in small circle
groups suited to encourage conversation. We will
have music and a thought-provoking reading followed
by small group discussion with coffee and fellowship
after service concludes. Children’s religious educa-
tion programs are suspended during the summer;
however, children are welcome at service.
Church Calendar An asterisk (*) indicates related article
SATURDAY, JULY 4 *Independence Day, p. 1
SUNDAY, JULY 5 Summer Discussion Service, 9:00 am
SUNDAY, JULY 12 Summer Discussion Service, 9:00 am
THURSDAY, JULY 16 Men’s Get-Together at Luft, 5:30 pm
SUNDAY, JULY 19 Summer Discussion Service, 9:00 am
*UU Potluck Picnic at Loos/Rohwer residence, 11:00 am
FRIDAY, JULY 24 UU Women’s Lunch at Minervas, 12:00 Noon
SUNDAY, JULY 26 Summer Discussion Service, 9:00 am
THURSDAY, JULY 30 *Ruth Meiers Hospitality House, 12 noon, p. 2
TBA July Board of Trustees Meeting
The BisMan UU Monthly Newsletter—Sharing Unitarian Universalist Values in the Capital City Area
Sunday, July 5 DISCUSSION: WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN
Facilitator: Don Morrison
Come join the discussion during the Fourth of July weekend as
we explore our identity and what it means to be a part of this
complex, diverse country.
Sunday, July 12 DISCUSSION: UU PRINCIPLE 4
Facilitator: Karen Van Fossan
Our fourth UU principle affirms "a free and responsible search
for truth and meaning." Join us as we honor this principle and
discuss its meaning in our lives.
Sunday, July 19 DISCUSSION: UU PRINCIPLE 2
Facilitator: Dale Pittman
Justice, equity and compassion in human relations: We will dis-
cuss how this principle promotes justice and deepens our un-
derstanding of one another.
Sunday, July 26 DISCUSSION: LIVING A SIMPLE LIFE
Facilitator: Paul Markel
We will evaluate the concept of simplicity in daily practice and
personal ideology.
Watch the Independence Day firework display on the UU front lawn! Bring
your own lawn chair or blanket, bug spray, whatever snacks and beverages
you would like (not required) and enjoy the fireworks display in fellowship
this Saturday, July 4th!
FIREWORKS DISPLAY
The Beacon
Our Monthly Newsletter Sharing Unitarian Universalist Values in the Capital City Area
Page 2
Candles for the Journey
*Our sympathy goes out to Paul and Tamera Markel on the death of Paul’s
mother, Phyllis Markel.
*And our congregation looks forward to welcoming two new babies this
fall. Elicia and Monte Faul are expecting their third child in late September, and Tamera
and Paul Markel are expecting their baby in November.
*Congratulations to Evan Markel for his acceptance to the UU College of Social Justice. He
will participate in Activate Southwest in Tucson, AZ during the first week of August.
UU PICNIC POTLUCK
Sunday, July 19 at 11:00 AM
Hosts: Liz Loos/ Frank Rohwer & Gus
1510 Woodvale Drive, Bismarck 58504
Bring a dish to share and your lawn chair.
UU provides paper plates, cups, utensils.
Activities: Trampoline with net, badminton,
big backyard to run around in.
Directions
*South on University Ave.
*Right (west) on 48th St. just past storage lockers
*1st Left (south) onto Sibley Dr.
*2nd Right (west) onto Estate Dr.
*1st Left onto Woodvale Dr.
*House #1510 is on the Right; red brick/white siding
with black shutters
Liz's contacts:
Hm: 751-0565
C: 426-2256
Special Donations
*Special donation made in honor of Jim Conley from Vinod & Aruna Seth.
*Donation to Vision Fund (May) made in honor of Tim Hathaway for serving on the board and in special appreciation of work
with the youth through RE program by Dean & Pat Conrad.
*Donation to Vision Fund (June) in appreciation for our being a Welcoming Congregation and sponsoring events such as Capital Pride by
Dean & Pat Conrad.
*UU contribution of $138.00 to Dakota OutRight from Interfaith Service for 2015 Capital Pride on June 21.
Ruth Meiers Hospitality House
On Thursday, July 30th we will again be
serving the noon meal at the Ruth Meier’s
Hospitality House. Pat Conrad is in need
of two to three volunteers to help her.
Anyone who can assist should contact Pat
at 701.4256281. Thanks!
Helen Hammond (above) pictured with 3 of her 4
paintings displayed at Missouri Slope Care Center
during their annual art show on June 12, 2015.
Photo: Pat Conrad
ART DISPLAY
URBAN HARVEST needs VOLUNTEERS this
season! Please contact Laura Knudsen at
[email protected] if inter-
ested!
Page 3 The Beacon
Our Monthly Newsletter Sharing Unitarian Universalist Values
Last Wishes Seminars – Follow-up Information
A loose leaf notebook containing all of the handouts distributed during the 4 sessions of the Last Wishes seminars has been
placed in the church library. This information is available for anyone to review, including those who did not attend any of the
sessions. If you want a copy of a specific document, please ask Tamera in the office to help you make a photocopy.
During the final session, two books related to the topics discussed were reviewed quickly – Being Mortal by Atul Gawande and
The Other Talk by Tim Prosch. Being Mortal is reviewed in this newsletter. The Other Talk will be reviewed in the August
newsletter. Both of these books are also being placed in the church library and are available for check out.
-Pat Conrad
Prairie restoration project in front of UU (above); milkweeds for
monarch caterpillars (below), June 29, 2015
UU HAPPENINGS
Native Plant Garden Making Progress
This spring, volunteers seeded the half-circle garden outside
the our big window with a mix of native plants such as bee balm,
blanket flower, black-eyed susan, blue flax and penstemon.
Numerous baby plants are now a few inches high, and a real
challenge to weed! Most gardeners can tell a baby pigweed
from a baby marigold, but what does a baby blue flax look
like? Those experienced in prairie restoration say it takes about
five years for a native plant garden to really hit its stride, so we
don’t expect many flowers the first year, but it will bloom all
summer once it gets established. Native plants provide food for
bees and butterflies, and should be very hardy.
-Ann Knudson
Since the Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriages, local media has contacted the Bis-
marck-Mandan Unitarian Universalist Fellowship & Church on our reaction. JOY! Board Co-
President, Marnie Piehl was interviewed by KFYR TV’s Nina Carter on Monday (pictured
below). Social Action Working Group member, Don Morrison, was interviewed via phone
by Bismarck Tribune reporter Amy Sisk earlier this week.
We are very pleased. Our UU congregation and UUs around the country have been holding same gender marriage ceremonies for more than 3 decades. We believe in the inherent worth and dignity of every person. So, for us, the change now is that our celebrating and honoring same gender couples can also be legally recognized. From the Unitarian Universalist perspective, the Supreme Court’s decision affirms justice, equity and compassion in human relations. Most Americans agree with that. The Supreme Court ruled on the side of freedom. They removed roadblocks
from UUs and many other religions to do what we understand is good and just
and honoring the worth and dignity of every person. Now those of us who
have been celebrating same gender marriages along with opposite gender
marriages will have what we do recognized. Those who believe differently are
free to continue to do as they have been and marry couples according to their
beliefs. Nothing changes for them. This is a very welcomed expansion of free-
dom.
Click on link below to watch the news clip!
Marnie Piehl interviewed by KFYR TV’s Nina Carter, June 29, 2015.
Overview statement to Bismarck Tribune
by Don Morrison (below)
http://www.kfyrtv.com/westdakotafox/home/headlines/Church-Responds-To--310816391.html
Page 4 The Beacon
Our Monthly Newsletter Sharing Unitarian Universalist Values
BEING MORTAL by Atul Gawande
The author, a surgeon in Boston and author of 3 previous award-winning and well received books, de-
scribes the marvelous developments in medicine, but how physicians are less than honest in talking to
their elderly patients at the end of their lives. Physicians are trained to cure people, not to treat them
as they age and become frail. Doctors, uncomfortable discussing patients’ anxieties about death, fall
back on false hopes and treatments that are actually shortening lives, instead of improving them.
Gawande traces how care for the elderly moved from services provided by extended family, as his
grandfather experienced in India, to out-of-home care as is currently more common in the US.
Gawande talks about nursing homes and how they often focus more on the safety of their residents than
on meeting the residents’ desires about food and beverage consumption and other decisions and activ-
ities the residents want to be involved in. He tells a charming story about the medical director of a New
York nursing home who challenged the established rules by bringing a large number of animals into
his facility, animals the residents benefitted from interacting with. He traces the development of sup-
ported living facilities, which he sees as better, but still not “home”. And he describes a service that
his own father used where services are provided by a “village” of support personnel in the patients’
own homes. Gawande also talks with admiration about palliative care and hospice.
As he concludes his book, Gawande lays out the important questions a palliative care specialist in his
own hospital uses with her terminally ill patients. She said, “A large part of the task is helping patients
negotiate the overwhelming anxiety – anxiety about death, anxiety about suffering, anxiety about loved
ones, and anxiety about finances.” That doctor has a list of questions to cover with patients in the time
before decisions have to be made: What do they understand their prognosis to be? What are their
concerns about what lies ahead? What kind of trade-offs are they willing to make? How do they want
to spend their time if their health worsens? And who do they want to make decisions if they can’t?
Being Mortal is an easy read, but maybe one that should be borrowed rather than purchased. The Bis-
marck Public Library has several copies, but all were out on loan when this book review was written.
So borrow this book from the church library. You will be glad you did, and will want all of your own
physicians to read it too.
-Review by Pat Conrad
BOOK REVIEW
Missouri Valley Coalition for Homeless People
www.MVCHP.org for more information
What: The Homelessness 101 Training is for those who may encounter folks
suffering from homelessness: how to be an advocate, where to refer those
who need direct services to in the community, what the reality of homeless-
ness in Bismarck/Mandan looks like.
Date & Time: August 6, 9 am-3 pm
Where: Brynhild Haugland Room at State Capitol
What: The Project Service Connect is to connect folks suffering from home-
lessness with services in the Missouri Valley region.
Date & Time: August 20 from 3-7 pm
Where: Bismarck Veterans Memorial Public Library
Interfaith Service at UU during Capital Pride event
June 21, 2015
Photo: Janis Cheney
Page 5 The Beacon
Our Monthly Newsletter Sharing Unitarian Universalist Values
Letter from UUA President
Love Can Change the World
DONATE NOW
Friday was a day of joy and celebration. As we learned of the Supreme Court’s ruling in
favor of marriage equality in every state, our hearts soared, and many eyes filled with tears
of joy. We won. Our tireless years of effort paid off; and I am convinced that this victory
would not have happened without the activism of Unitarian Universalists.
Yet, as we celebrate national marriage equality and how our work and persistence truly
can change the world, we must also remember that there is still work to be done. We are
still far from full equality, particularly for transgender individuals and people of color, and
that work and persistence are still needed. The grief we feel from the horrific murders in
Charleston still weighs heavily upon us. Let us continue to bring a strong message of love.
Let’s use this marriage equality victory as inspiration for all of our justice work. Same-sex
couples filled the stage at General Assembly Friday morning, as we heard from some of
those who helped forge the path to marriage equality. Rev. Meg Riley, Senior Minister at
the Church of the Larger Fellowship, said, “…may we, as we proclaim that Black Lives
Matter, carve the rivers of our faith that tell us that using every ounce of power we have will
help to get us where we want to go."
We will not give up on justice in any area. We can and we will continue to change the
world. Until racially targeted violence is no longer a threat. Until LGBTQ individuals have
no need to fear losing their jobs because of who they are. Until reproductive healthcare
and information is accessible to everyone. Until the worth and dignity of every person is
respected. Please make a gift today to the Friends of the UUA to support our ongoing work for justice.
Faithfully,
Rev. Peter Morales
President, Unitarian Universalist Association
SAVE THE DATES—UU POTLUCK SUMMER
PICNICS!
Sunday, July 19 (see p. 2)
Sunday, August 16 (Potluck Picnic and
Blessing of the Animals) at Sertoma
Park
UU Pride Booth at Custer Park, June 20, 2015
Four of 9 volunteers pictured on right: Dean Conrad, Pat Con-
rad, Keith Donaldson, Carol Jean Larsen
Photo: Carol Jean Larsen
Vision Statement
We will be a vibrant, caring, spiritual community
for all who seek an inspirational and
religious home.
Mission Statement
We are a fellowship of free minds, welcoming
all, a beacon of enlightenment and sanctuary,
and offering a call to build a better self,
community and world.
Religious Education Mission Statement
The Bismarck-Mandan Unitarian Universalist
Fellowship seeks to provide a path for spiritual
inquiry for people of all ages.
Welcoming Congregation
We are a Unitarian Universalist Welcoming
Congregation that seeks to be a spiritual home
for people of free faith regardless of race, color,
gender, affectional or sexual orientation, age,
national origin, socioeconomic status,
physical or mental ability.
2015 Board of Trustees and Staff
Co-President, Marnie Piehl [email protected]
Co-President, Molly Brooks [email protected]
Secretary, Ronya Hoblit [email protected]
Treasurer, Lisa Omlid [email protected]
Trustee, Stephen Crane [email protected]
Office Administrator Tamera Markel
Church phone: 701-223-6788 Cell phone: 701-934-3169
E-mail: [email protected]
Bis-Man UU Fellowship & Church
Check out our Website!
www.bismanuu.org
P.O. Box 297
Bismarck, ND 58502
We are on Facebook!
SUMMER CHURCH OFFICE HOURS
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
12:00pm—3:00 pm
It is ALWAYS a good idea to call first before stopping by: 701.223.6788
Very Useful Links
Unitarian Universalist Association
www.uua.org
Mid America Region
http://midamericauua.org/
Quest for Meaning
(Church of the Larger Fellowship Young Adult Forum—VERY cool!)
www.questformeaning.org
6.14.15 Congregational Meeting Nubs:
Consensus was our congregation should try to
make part-time minister work; hoping to grow
and have more of a community presence with
an eye on maintaining/growing lay capacity
Still a lay-led congregation, part-time ministry
to be as a trusted advisor and in pastoral care;
volunteers are still very needed—
responsibilities not to be handed over; Board
emphasized the position is supporting, not
leading; involved in strategic planning
Compensation estimated to be $20,000/year,
depending (hourly compensation); our congre-
gation is able to support this effort for one year;
would have to fundraise/pledge for subsequent
years to cover cost
*Minutes from our meetings are available to read on
the bulletin board outside the church office.